Jing Kong
Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS)
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Room 13-3065
Cambridge, MA 02139
jingkong@mit.edu
617.324.4068
Administrative Assistant
Arlene Wint
aewint@mit.edu
Professor Jing Kong is a principal investigator in the Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). She received the B.S in chemistry from Peking University in 1997 and the Ph.D. in chemistry from Stanford University in 2002. From 2002 to 2003, she was a research scientist at NASA Ames Research Center, and from 2003 to 2004, she was a postdoctoral researcher at Delft University. She joined the MIT faculty in 2004 in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
Professor Kong’s research interests focus on the problem of combining the synthesis and fabrication of individual carbon nanotubes, and integrating them into electrical circuits. Applications of her research include the use of carbon nanotubes as extremely sensitive chemical sensors to detect toxic gases.
Professor Kong is member of the American Chemical Society, the American Physical Society, and the Materials Research Society. She received the 2001 Foresight Distinguished Student Award in Nanotechnology in 2001, the Stanford Annual Reviews Prize in Physical Chemistry in 2002, and the MIT 3M Award in 2005.
Keywords
carbon nanotubes, nanotube electronic devices, semiconductor nanowires, organic molecules, chemical sensors, electron transport, one-dimensional interacting systems, chemical vapor deposition methods, quantum transport phenomena
Group Websites
Related News Links
01.28.2022
Giving bug-like bots a boost
10.11.2019
A new way to corrosion-proof thin atomic sheets
03.26.2019
New approach could boost energy capacity of lithium batteries
03.06.2019
Smoothing out the wrinkles in graphene
08.03.2017
Graphene electrodes add flexibility and transparency to solar cells
01.27.2016
New chip fabrication approach
05.29.2015
Thin coating on condensers could make power plants more efficient
03.19.2015
EECS Faculty Promotions for Adalsteinsson, Daniel, and Kong
12.16.2014
New findings could point the way to “valleytronics”
10.22.2014
Watts, Moresco, Kong, Fang, Jung, Baldo, Azunre receive Deshpande research grants
Related News Articles
Selected Publications
12.08.2023
Van der Waals integration beyond the limits of van der Waals forces using adhesive matrix transfer
02.10.2022
Soft-lock drawing of super-aligned carbon nanotube bundles for nanometre electrical contacts
08.26.2021
Designing artificial two-dimensional landscapes via atomic-layer substitution
03.06.2019
Paraffin-enabled graphene transfer
12.07.2018
Characterizing Percolative Materials by Straining
03.31.2015
Scalable Graphene Coatings for Enhanced Condensation Heat Transfer (NANO Letters)